TRENTON — Utility company PSE&G shut off the gas and electric power to Mayor Tony Mack’s Berkeley Avenue home on Wednesday due to non-payment, marking the latest in a series of setbacks for the embattled mayor who recently had his house and City Hall offices raided by the FBI.

“The power was turned off for non-payment,” a PSE&G worker said as he sat inside a utility truck that was parked in front of the mayor’s house 5 p.m. Wednesday. Sources said the mayor owes about $15,000 in electric and gas payments for being more than a year delinquent on paying his electric utility bills.

PSE&G gives delinquent ratepayers ample time to make good on payments before shutting off a customer’s electricity, according to spokeswoman Bonnie Sheppard.

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“While we are permitted to interrupt service much sooner, PSEG typically does not shut off service until the customer is more than two months delinquent,” Sheppard said on Wednesday. “By this time, regular payments have not been made, the customer has established a poor payment history and we have made numerous attempts to contact the customer.”

The loss of Mack’s electric power came at a time when one of his allies, Trenton Councilman Alex Bethea, said the FBI action surrounding Mack “doesn’t look good.”

Federal agents on July 19 rummaged through Mack’s office during a raid of City Hall, which occurred one day after the FBI executed search warrants at the mayor’s Berkeley Square Historic District house and other homes.

Federal authorities to date haven’t disclosed any details or rationale for the raids other than to say they are all part of an ongoing investigation. No one has been charged, and the mayor said, “I have not violated my duties or the public trust.”

Thousands of city residents last year tried, but failed, to have Mack recalled from office. One of the supporters of the failed recall effort was former Trenton police director James Golden, who in a recent interview said, “I will continue to be involved at any initiative aimed at getting our city back on track and in the right direction.”

Mack’s ongoing failure to pay his electric and gas utility bills is the latest of setbacks he’s encountered since taking office on July 1, 2010.

Mack has had a history of personal finance issues, including fighting foreclosure proceedings on his home. The city itself has faced financial hurdles under Mack’s tutelage, culminating with Mack laying off 105 police officers last year.

Early in Mack’s term, the city’s four neighborhood branch libraries were closed in August 2010 as the city weathered a budget crisis. This year, Mack re-opened all four of the shuttered libraries as learning centers. Former state librarian Norma E. Blake, before retiring, said Mack’s use of learning centers as pseudo-libraries violates state law.

The city’s Landmarks Commission for Historic Preservation last month rejected the presence of Mack’s $17,000 sign at Cadwalader Park. The commission in a 3-2 vote demanded the immediate removal of the structure, which was installed at the park without the proper permission.

Under Mack’s watch, the city is paying $10 million to maintain unused and emptied-out police substations in the East and West wards, according to South Ward Councilman George Muschal. A judge also ordered the city to pay $684,000 to a developer to remedy Mack’s breaching of a contract that called for the establishment of a new municipal courthouse at Westside Plaza.

PSE&G follows the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities’ regulatory requirements concerning shutoffs for non-payment, according to Sheppard.

Under the process, a PSE&G residential customer receives a “Notice Reminder” with their bill when they become one month delinquent. At that time, they may also receive a phone call from an automated calling service, Sheppard said.

If the customer continues the delinquent payment pattern, they will receive a “Discontinuance Notice” with their bill. A payment due date is specified, and at that time, PSE&G will also request the delinquent customer to call the utility to make payment arrangements, Sheppard said. The customer will continue to receive phone calls.

“Customers who are shut off for non-payment can have their service restored with a significant down payment and a deferred payment arrangement on the balance,” Sheppard said. “If they have broken a deferred payment arrangement in the past 12 months, we will require payment of the full amount to restore service.”

For anyone in Mack’s position of struggling to pay residential electric and gas bills, PSE&G is willing to work with those financially strapped ratepayers.

“PSE&G encourages customers who are having trouble paying their bills to call us first — they shouldn’t wait until they start receiving shut-off warnings on their bill,” Sheppard said. “We work with our customers to determine a reasonable deferred payment arrangement. And we refer them to agencies in their area that can help. It is always better for customers to make a monthly payment than to ignore a bill.”

Mack on Wednesday didn’t return a phone message seeking comment. A woman at the mayor’s home on Wednesday didn’t respond to a knock on the door but later came out to say, “It’s none of your business.”